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Stereopsis: How the brain sees depth

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1 Stereopsis: How the brain sees depth
Bruce Cumming  Current Biology  Volume 7, Issue 10, Pages R645-R647 (October 1997) DOI: /S (06)

2 Figure 1 Depth perception based on binocular disparities. The fovea of each eye fixates point F; because object T is closer to the observer than F, the image of T falls at different retinal locations in the two eyes. The dotted line marks the equivalent retinal location in the two eyes. Neurons with receptive fields in both eyes could detect this disparity in two ways. (a) Position difference: the right eye receptive field is an exact copy of the left eye receptive field, but in a different retinal location. (b) Phase difference: the envelope enclosing the right receptive field profile sits in the same position as for the left receptive field, but within the envelope, the right receptive field has a different structure, responding best to white light on the right hand side. When tested with a bright bar, both of these mechanisms produce a maximal response to a stimulus with a disparity equal to that of T. Current Biology 1997 7, R645-R647DOI: ( /S (06) )

3 Figure 2 When disparity is detected in simple cells by means of a phase shift, the disparity selectivity expected in response to black bars is different from that expected in response to white bars. In this example, a bright bar evokes the strongest response when it lies behind the reference cross (the image on the left retina is displaced to the left). For a dark bar, a disparity in front of the cross is optimal (the image on the left retina is displaced to the right). Current Biology 1997 7, R645-R647DOI: ( /S (06) )


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